Video is cued to 0:24, when some kind of animal leaps from the floor into a person’s hand, expertly rotating in the air to land in the correct orientation.
I’ve searched for bush baby, sugar glider, and lemur, but none seems to be a good match for this critter. Tried a blurry screen grab in Google Image Search, but it just came back with a few cat pics.
A sugar glider is a type of possum. but a sugar glider doesn’t have the huge leg thing…
So its a brushtail possum, they make good pets. here’s one videod in Hamilton , NZ, numerous videos of it. They were introduced into NZ and are a considered a pest there.
A sugar glider also has a black stripe on the center of its forehead, and the animal in my video does not. Sugar glider also has less black around the eyes.
a brushtail possum doesn’t seem to have any black around the eyes, either. Plus they look like they’re far larger than the mystery animal.
Impatient much today? I am pretty sure by now it is a brown mouse lemur, and considering their size, they really do have arms of steel. Their habitat is threatened, but that is no excuse to keep them as pets. Poor thing.
Could also be a grooves’ dwarf lemur, (Cheirogaleus grovesi), from the C. crosselyi group, of which there are several species (C. andysabini, C. crossleyi, C. lavasoensis and an unnamed possible new species, “CCS2”)
Sorry for coming across as impatient. I took a bit to compose that post, and ended up posting it right after you had posted (without reading your post).
Shoot, sorry about that. This has been confusing to figure out. Yesterday I searched youtube for "grey mouse lemur jumping", and many of the resulting video titles included both “grey mouse lemur” and “bushbaby”. Searching for “mohol bushbaby” gives results with more specific titles and more consistent imagery of animals very much like the one in my OP. Thanks!
Don’t worry, I meant running_coach anyway. He didn’t even give me time to precise my wrong answer! Ah, well, TIL that there are bush babies in South Africa that are primates, I had them associated with marsupials in another continent.